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Published on Taipei Times http://www.taipeitimes.com/News/feat/archives/2005/09/30/2003273896 Getting Global 2005 TIEFF opens up a window to diversity The festival aims to raise awareness on a whole raft of cultural issues
By Ho Yi
Choosing the theme of family variations for this year's programs, festival curator Lin Wen-ling (ªL¤å¬Â) said the aim is to present cultural differences and diversity from cross-cultural perspectives on families from various regions. As a basic social unit, the family is not only closely related to kinship and marital systems, gender roles and customs, but also heavily influenced by social, economic, political and cultural conditions of society. Lin believes that an insightful understanding on the social construction of families can be gained from examining family relationships.
In the program dedicated to John Marshall, as a leading figure in ethnographic cinema, the festival will present the first two films of his five-part series of A Kalahari Family that documents 50 years of the lives of tribespeople in South Africa's Karahari Desert. Marshall began his remarkable interaction with the tribe during his first trip to Africa in 1951 and followed closely the changing lives of the tribe members and also got deeply involved in the tribe's fight for the survival of their culture until the series was completed in 2002. Apart from the family variations series three programs grouped under the theme of new vision will introduce works that examine various issues affecting human rights and indigenous cultures. Indigenous Perspectives presents award-winning films from Australia, Canada, China and Taiwan that document cultural conflicts and the political and social oppression faced by native tribes. The :"Human Rights and Autonomy" section includes What Remains of Us from Canada, a brave documentary about a young director who carried video messages recorded by the former spiritual and political leader of Tibet, the Dalai Lama, into the "largest prison in the world" and shot the film without the knowledge of Chinese authorities. Before the screening, the festival staff will ask the audience to leave all recording equipment outside the theater for the protection and safety of the people featured in the film.
Due to the tight budgets faced by most fringe festivals in Taiwan, the festival will show one screening per day for each film in its five-days. The organizer has invited more than half of the participating foreign directors to Taipei for an international exchange on ethnographic cinema and to hold question and answer sessions after each screening. For more information about the films and screening schedule visit TIEFF's bilingual official Web site at http://www.tieff.sinica.edu.tw.
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